if the formeris comparatively studied from the view point of philologywith the latter. The literary works of these old Wester^Vernaculars, especially old Qnjarati and alsoare still so many in MSS. unpublished that if t&eypublished thoroughly and care

hours 12 till 3. Uany of thesmaller churches are open only till 8 or 9 a.m. Visitors may inspectthe works of art even during divine service, provided they moveabont noiselessly, and keep aloof from the altar where the clergyare officiating. On the oc

qualify for addedsavings through bonus books, which you canpick from our full list of 150-200 fine works.Exceptional quality. In its 31 years, the Clubhas distributed over 1,000 outstanding books,including 64 award-winners. Our books arealways the e

s sometimes called "Mud Island" and was an important point in the defenses of the Delaware. An earthworks hastily built in 1776, on Mud Island, and then surrounded by water with a deep channel is now firmly united with the mainland. It was called Mud

h modernvernacular literature. I therefore giv6 no particularsconcerning authors of purely Sanskrit works, and excludefrom consideration books written in Prakrit, even whenit may have been a vernacular, as not connoted by the termmodern. Nor do I rec

pted a plan suitable to a literatui-e whichconsists chiefly of interpretations of Pali and Sanskrit works, religious or otherwise.The system of transliteration followed here is that adopted in the recent Orientalcatalogues, with certain variations an

rnithology of Charnwood. Seerotter.Babington, John. Pyrotechnia ; or a Discourse of Artificial Eire-works ; whereunto is annexed a short Treatise of Geometric.Folio. London, 1635.Babington, William. A New System of Mineralogy, in the form ofCatalogue

rs remark, those terms were already introduced byearlier grammarians.' None of the [6] more ancient works,however, seem to be now extant: being superseded by his,they have probably been disused for ages, and are now perhapstotally lost.*A performance